OK, let's target beginners. Hmmm.... which JDK should we focus on? How do
we decide? There's no way to decide, we cannot decide for beginners or
anyone else which JDK they should use. No other tool or IDE can do that
either.

Gj

On Thu, May 30, 2019 at 4:07 PM mike james <mike.ja...@infomaxgroup.co.uk>
wrote:

> See I told you it was confusing.
> I know I'm going on about beginners a lot but you really do need to target
> them.
> You have got the experienced seasoned user and they aren't going anywhere
> unless
> there is a really good reason but the future is in the beginner. If they go
> off to IntelliJ, Eclipse or
> Visual Studio Code because they sound trendy and have a one click install
> you have lost the future.
> mikej
>
> On Thu, May 30, 2019 at 2:28 PM Eduardo Quintanilla <equintani...@bnext.mx
> >
> wrote:
>
> > I would recommend reading the Java Is Still Free document
> >
> >
> https://docs.google.com/document/d/1nFGazvrCvHMZJgFstlbzoHjpAVwv5DEdnaBr_5pKuHo/edit?usp=sharing
> >
> > From  that document
> >
> > Free Builds for Linux, Windows, Mac, etc. [OpenJDK, no commercial
> support]:
> >
> > AdoptOpenJDK (commercial support also available by IBM and jClarity)
> > https://adoptopenjdk.net/
> >
> > ....
> >
>

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